Friday, October 5, 2018

Supreme Court "Red" for Decades: Collins, Manchin Vote YES Ensuring Kavanaugh Confirmation


After months of debate, last minute allegations of sexual assault, an FBI investigation and dozens of hours of tense testimony, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh now has the 50 votes required to be confirmed to the Supreme Court, after both GOP Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia announced that they would be voting yes. GOP holdout Jeff Flake of Arizona also said that he would vote to confirm Kavanaugh "unless something big changed."

Earlier in the day, the Senate completed a cloture vote to advance Kavanaugh to final confirmation, which Manchin broke ranks and voted in favor of.

Most senators sat at their desk as the dramatic roll call unfolded, with major suspense over where Murkowski, Manchin and Flake would land. Collins was the first swing vote to support Kavanaugh on the procedural roll call, quickly followed by Flake. Murkowski then inaudibly voted no, a jarring defection that left Republicans with no room for error.
After it was clear that Kavanaugh had the 50 votes needed to advance, Manchin became Kavanaugh's only Democratic supporter. Manchin, who left the chamber when the clerk called his name, came back into the chamber and voted in favor of Kavanaugh. His phone could be seen ringing and Manchin stared at it as the vote continued. -Politico
"This is a difficult decision for everybody," Flake said to reporters, who added that he thinks Kavanaugh will be confirmed on Saturday.

Meanwhile, Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) is set to fly to Montana to attend his daughter's Saturday wedding. If the vote is too close without Daines, he will be forced to fly back to Washington D.C. to cast the deciding vote.

"We'll wait and see how this all unfolds," Daines said. "We have transportation arranged and we'll wait and see what happens." He added that Rep. Greg Gianforte (R-MT) offered him the use of his private plane.
President Trump has taken a largely hands-off approach to Kavanaugh's confirmation - instead communicating in private with his political allies, such as Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), according to Politico, which adds that the White House is "cautiously opimistic" that Kavanaugh will be confirmed.

According to PredictIt, however, Kavanaugh's odds of confirmation now stand at 96%...

- Source, Zero Hedge, read more here